1. Blogger Ezra Klein went on MSNBC and said the Constitution is a hundred years old and hard to understand.

Apparently, this drew flak.

2. Then he blogged at 11:55 AM on Thursday:  My friends on the right dont like to hear this, but the Constitution is not a clear document. Written more than 200 years ago, when America had 13 states and very different problems, it rarely speaks directly to the questions we ask it. The Second Amendment, for instance, says nothing about keeping a gun in the home if youve not signed up with a well-regulated militia, but interpreting the Second Amendment broadly has been important to those who want to bear arms. And so theyve done it 

Apparently, this drew flak.

3. Then he blogged at 3:57 PM on Thursday:  The Constitution was written more than 223 years ago, and despite the confidence various people have in their interpretation of the text, smart scholars of good faith continue to disagree about it. And they tend to disagree about it in ways that support their political ideology. I rarely meet a gun-lover who laments the Second Amendments clear limits on bearing firearms, or someone who believes in universal health care but thinks the proper interpretation of the Commerce Clause doesnt leave room for such a policy 

Then I assume, he went to his favorite bar, got loaded and told old war stories. But he did go from the Constitution being written in 1910, to 1810, to 1787 in a few hours so he learned something on Thursday.

Iowahawk had a wonderful send-up: The Constitution is very important.

Ezra Klein made the biggest mistake that can be made by a liberal  progressive  socialist  communist  no labelist  whatever the heck they call themselves on the 31st of the month.

He was being honest.

He does not believe in the Constitution.

He is cynical about it and he projects that same cynicism onto those who disagree with him.

That shocked the lefts system. Being honest does that to them. They use euphemisms to hide their true beliefs. The reason, for example, that they see illegal immigrant as racist is that they cannot imagine anyone other than a Mexican as being an illegal immigrant. They use undocumented worker because they want to promote poor Jose coming here to make a grub stake. They do not see the criminals or the relatives from Ireland or the Asian student who overstayed a visa. Its always this stereotype.

But I stray. Ezra Kleins first post-MSNBC interview post was telling and headlined: What the tea party wants from the Constitution.

He projected what he wants from the Constitution on to the Tea Party. Sure. The Left sees the Tea Party in their own image. Thats why the Left at first called the Tea Party Astroturf because the Left creates all these fake groups. Look at how it tried to counter the Tea Party movement later with the Coffee Party and the like.

And so it goes with the Constitution. For 8 years, the Lefts railed against Bush shredding the Constitution, a phrase which came to mean nothing. Like the Boy Who Cried Wolf, the Left cried shredding the Constitution once too often.

When the Tea Party cites the Constitution, Ezra Klein projects onto them his own disdain for the document, as he wrote in his 11:55 AM post:

My friends on the right dont like to hear this, but the Constitution is not a clear document. Written more than 200 years ago, when America had 13 states and very different problems, it rarely speaks directly to the questions we ask it. The Second Amendment, for instance, says nothing about keeping a gun in the home if youve not signed up with a well-regulated militia, but interpreting the Second Amendment broadly has been important to those who want to bear arms. And so theyve done it.

Thats their right, of course. Liberals pick and choose their moments of textual fidelity as well. But as the seemingly endless series of 5-4 splits on the Supreme Court shows, even the countrys most experienced and decorated constitutional authorities routinely disagree, and sharply, over what the text means when applied to todays problems. To presume that people writing what they think the Constitution means  or, in some cases, want to think it means  at the bottom of every bill will change how they legislate doesnt demonstrate a reverence for the document. It demonstrates a disengagement with it as anything more than a symbol of what you and your ideological allies believe.

In reality, the tea party  like most everyone else  is less interested in living by the Constitution than in deciding what it means to live by the Constitution. When the constitutional disclaimers at the bottom of bills suit them, theyll respect them. When they dont  as weve seen in the case of the individual mandate  they wont.

What a telling statement in that last paragraph is.

What Ezra Klein means by most everyone else is Ezra Klein.

And so the sentence means that Ezra Klein is not interested in living by the Constitution but rather, Ezra Klein wants to decide what the Constitution means.

That is his point of view.

Such a belief would explain why the Left was so upset about Gitmo  shredding the Constitution  under Bush but now could not care less about Gitmo.

But his honesty meant that four hours later, he had to write a post: Yes, the Constitution is binding.

The nut paragraph: But my inbox suggests that my comments werent taken that way: The initial interpretation was that Id said the Constitution is too complicated to understand because it was written a long time ago, and then, as the day went on, that Id said the document itself is nonbinding. I went back and watched the clip  or at least the part someone clipped and sent me, which is above  and thought I was clear enough. But when a lot of people misunderstand you at once, the fault is usually yours. So if I was unclear: Yes, the Constitution is binding. No, its not clear which interpretation of the Constitution the Supreme Court will declare binding at any given moment. And no, reading the document on the floor of the House will not make the country more like you want it to be, unless your problem with the country is that you thought the Constitution should be read aloud on the floor of the House more frequently. In which case, well, youre in luck!

Still cynical. The Constitution is meaningless to him. Oh it is binding but fluid.

Well, when you are taught  as Al Gore said it  that the Constitution is a living and breathing document you really miss the entire point of having a Constitution.

So I do not condemn Ezra Klein. I praise him for telling the truth about his feelings toward the Constitution. To him, limited government and personal liberty are all open to interpretation, which means they do not exist unless a court says they do.

Me? The Constitution means what it says. I even like the Third Amendment.

I believe that Ezra Klein's honesty was an unintentional mistake. The problem, as Don Surber showed, was that he projected his belief system onto everyone else. He thought everyone else had no honor and was as desirous of forcing their policies on everyone as he is.

Our Constitution, whatever its perceived flaws, is far better than the constitution of Great Britain. It has NONE.

There are no constitutional restraints on the raw power of the English government. NONE. Hence the arrival of the welfare state and socialized medicine in England. Hence the decline and fall of the secular and drunken British state.

It’s intersting that the left cannot ensconce itself as a governing entity without lies, deceit and murder. Then, when it achieves power it cannot maintain that power without force (including minimizing the population’s gun ownership) and more lies, deceit and murder.

Yet, the Marxists see themselves as the most enlightened people on earth.

The Second Amendment, for instance, says nothing about keeping a gun in the home if youve not signed up with a well-regulated militia

"Signed up"? That's like saying you can't eat unless you're signed up as a member of the human race. Surber does not know what he's talking about here.

A "well-regulated militia" implies two things: 1) every armed male citizen of age is automatically considered part of the militia; and "well regulated" means well-disciplined, or skilled. If the people can't keep and bear arms for themselves, and thus become competent in using them, how will they be expected to come together as the militia and defend their town, state, or country? Liberals who think the militia is something you "sign up for" are just stupid.

Surber falls into two failed and faulty mindsets in this piece: "only government can fix problems" and "words in the Constitution mean what the Progressives have defined them to mean in the last 100 years."

I’ll bet the little metrosexual turd-fondler could dazzle both of his readers with a learned article about gay sex education for 5 year olds and the benefits of multiple abortions. Ah,,, the fruits of higher education.

It was nice that he did it while were all for a few days, so we had a minute to contemplate the liberal mind, and what it thinks about our founding documents and if they had their way, where we would be in 5 minutes if they got total control.

These are the ramblings of a fool, but they are the thinking of the socialist.

Their BS about settled law has killed millions, and that same BS will soon be heard about health care

18
posted on 01/01/2011 7:01:30 AM PST
by reefdiver
("Let His day's be few And another takes His office")

he problem, as Don Surber showed, was that he projected his belief system onto everyone else. He thought everyone else had no honor and was as desirous of forcing their policies on everyone as he is. The very concepts of honor, limited government, individual freedom, and mutual respect seem quite alien to him.

I'd really like to think you intended to write such an thoroughly ironic comment....

Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.